I don't design 100% native plant gardens because I'm trying to return
Lincoln to tallgrass prairie (though that'd be fine); I understand we've
murdered that ecosystem. I design 100% native plant gardens because the
insects, and more, that evolved with the tallgrass prairie still exist
and play a critical role in the current and future ecosystems that are
developing in the wake of our ecocide. I design with native plants
because it creates awareness for the prairies that are left (mixed and
shortgrass), their benefit in carbon sequestration, topsoil retention,
and water filtration. I design with native plants because it helps us
look at ourselves, our place as gardeners that remake the world for our
idea of beauty and utility, and how just relying on our sense of what
pretty is can be short-sighted and unethical. I design with native
plants because so many of them can help urban soil remediation. I design
with native plants because they already, in part, work together from an
aesthetic point of view (though we can and should push the artistic
limits of that built in natural aesthetic). I design with native plants
because without them I would not care for Nebraska one bit. I design
with native plants because my heart has broken, and I know no other way
to mend it. I sing the grassland. I shout the prairie dog and fringed
orchid.
3 comments:
another language, another tune, but I sing in harmony with you.
Benjamin, well said.
The aesthetics of a plant are immeasurably deepened by awareness of its ecological connections. Without that awareness, gardening is just decoration. To put a plant into an environment that engages those connections, brings it to life.
D -- I know you do. :)
B -- Could NOT have said that better myself!
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